Anne (2004) | |
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Anne by Nic I Anne was fifteen, and she hated her life. She was a tall, gangly girl, awkward and even outright clumsy, still growing into her height. She was very shy, with only two close friends, Jen and Candace, both of them misfits like her. Her classmates, when they thought of her at all, thought of her as a bookish loner, a quiet girl who kept to herself, staying silent in class, spending her lunch hours in quiet conversation with her friends, or reading by herself in the library. She wasn't naturally that way, though she'd been shy most of her life. A psychologist might have blamed it on her mother, an abusive drunk who had scalded Anne with her tongue when sober, and beaten her when in her bottle. Luckily for Anne, two years ago her father had finally had enough, and had served her mother with divorce papers. Due to her mothers' violent nature, the courts had taken the unusual step of awarding Anne's father custody. Since the divorce, Anne had seen her mother only a handful of times. She and her father had moved into a new, smaller house across town, one that fit with his reduced financial circumstances; her mother had moved too, to a small one bedroom apartment where she spent the days drinking away her alimony and moving from one boyfriend to another. Anne didn't visit her mother very often, and her mother rarely made an effort to get in contact, except on her birthdays and during Christmas. The situation suited Anne just fine. Anne hated her mother, and wanted nothing to do with her. Since the divorce, her dad had told her about some of the fucked up things her mother used to do, ranging from the embarrassing to the sadistic. Anne supposed she was probably getting a one-sided view, but had never gone to any pains to get the other half of the story. Her mother had given her pain enough. Still, two years without her mothers' influence hadn't done much to bring Anne out of the protective emotional armour she'd built up around herself. She still spent most of her time in private pursuits; as she matured, it became increasingly apparent to her family (well, more properly, her father, as he was the only family she had) that she regarded most human contact as an imposition to be avoided if possible, and endured if not. He worried, of course, but there seemed to be little he could do beyond suggesting to her that she try and make more friends, perhaps join some clubs. In the end, she seemed happy enough, and for the most part her father deemed it wise to let her be. For two years, Anne and her father had been alone. Oh, he'd seen different women, off and on, throughout the time, but they came and went like the weather, and Anne mostly ignored them. Then, six months ago, there had come a new woman, one about whom her father seemed quite serious. Anne hadn't realized just how serious until, one day, he'd come into her room, sat down on her bed, and told her that, in one month, she was to have a new mother. A new mother, Anne could have dealt with. That would have been fine: another adult to ignore for three more years, until she left to go off to college in some distant city. It wasn't the new mother that bothered Anne. It was the new sister that came along with it. Anne had always been an only child. Once, when she was much younger, she'd wished desperately for a younger sister, but in keeping with her present opinion that other people were inconveniences, the idea of a sibling - even a step-sibling - seemed like a horrible idea. She couldn't imagine what madness had possessed her father, but she figured something had to be done. A week before the wedding, she'd suggested to her father - in the same quiet, reasonable tones he used with her when advising that she join the drama club or stake up some other similarly dull pursuit - that he might want to see a psychologist. Her father had laughed, thinking that she was joking, and told her to run along and go back to her books. She met the other half of her new family some time before the wedding was to take place. Her father and soon-to-be step-mother were together two or three nights every week for dinner, and, of course, she often brought along her daughter, Maria. It turned out that Maria and Anne were almost the same age. Beyond that, though, they had nothing in common. Where Anne was overly tall and thin, Maria was average in height and generously curved in all the right places. Where Anne's hair was stringy and blonde, Maria's was long and black, falling past her shoulders in thick, luxurious curls. Where Anne was naturally retiring, even frosty, Maria had a friendly, exuberant nature. They dressed differently, too - Anne in sensible jeans and t-shirts, Maria in halter-tops and tight, bleach-patterned denim that showed off her figure admirably. Anne disliked her on sight, a feeling which intensified with every meeting. She told herself that it was because of Maria's bubbleheadedness, but deep down, she knew she was just a little envious. Strangely enough, Maria didn't return Anne's feelings. It seemed, Anne gradually realised, that she was simply unable to comprehend that other people might not like her. Maria was unfailingly nice to her, seeming more puzzled than hurt when Anne tried to cut her down with a vicious remark, or shut her up with a cold shoulder. Her father, however, noticed her behaviour, and he scolded her for it harshly when Beth, her new step-mother, had gone home with her daughter. "Anne," he said, "I know you don't want me to marry, that you just want things to continue on as they are, but I love Beth, I'm going to marry her, and it's best that you learn to accept that, and everything that comes with it. One of those things you have to accept is that you're going to have to live with Maria, and it will be easier for everyone, including you, if you learn to get along with her." Anne had just rolled her eyes and gone up to her room, losing herself in whatever book she'd been reading. II Three months had passed since the wedding. Once again, they'd moved, this time into a bigger house, one with enough room for all four of them. Luckily it hadn't meant changing schools, like last time, but she was a lot farther away now, enough that she was well outside her school's bus route. That had looked like trouble, originally, but Beth had volunteered to drive her to and from school each day, as it was on her way to work anyway. "Besides," she said, "It'll give us a chance to get to know each other." Anne wasn't so sure she wanted to get to know Beth. Her step-mother was a nice person, of course - a lot like her daughter in many ways, including her looks - but still. She was just one more boring human, with her own boring life and boring opinions and boring problems that she soon took to trying to unload on Anne during their daily drives. Whatever, it was way better than taking public transit. Anne would take Beth over a busload of ugly random strangers any day. Truth be told, Anne only had one real problem with her step-mother, and that was that she smoked. Her mother had smoked, too, and Anne associated smoking with her mother's abusive ways. She'd soon gotten over that prejudice, once she'd learned that Beth was really quite a nice person. Of course, the horrible stench still bothered her, and Anne dearly wished she'd quit, but failing that, at least Beth was polite about it, holding the tip of the cigarette next to the window and blowing the smoke outside. Today, though, she wouldn't be getting a ride home. It was a long weekend, and her father had made plans with Beth to get away for the weekend, just the two of them. A romantic retreat in the mountains, or something. "You two girls are old enough to mind the house while we're gone," he'd said, "And besides, you wouldn't want to spend the weekend hanging out with a couple of old farts like us." So today Anne was taking the bus home from school. It took her twenty minutes longer than a straight-forward drive, the bus stopping at what seemed like every street-corner to pick up and drop off passengers. Anne had staked out her territory as soon as she'd gotten on, sitting down on the aisle seat and putting her backpack on the seat beside her. Once, about halfway through when the bus was pretty well full, some creepy guy had tried to sit next to her, but Anne had stared him down and he'd backed off, grabbing a rail and standing until his stop came. Finally, she got home. She'd been on the bus long enough to get almost to the end of The Left Hand of Darkness, a book by Ursula K. LeGuin, one of her favorite science fiction authors. That wasn't so bad, she thought, half surprised. Better than having to talk to Beth for half an hour. She lived in an old brownstone, dating back to sometime near the beginning of the last century. It was in an old neighborhood, on the outskirts of town. You could tell the neighborhood was old because the trees were so big, shading the street even with the sun sitting at the top of the sky. Anne had to admit that she liked her new home a hell of a lot more than their last one, a tiny, anonymous dwelling in a featureless suburban enclave with a forgettable name like Sunnydale or Mapleview or something. The new place had character, and history. Anne amused herself sometimes by thinking about the kinds of things that must have happened in the house. She kept meaning to go down to the public library some time, and search through the microfiche to see if something really juicy had ever happened there, like a murder or a scandal or something. She knew the odds were against it, but she could always hope. She knew Maria was inside the minute she opened the door. She could tell because the TV was on; she was pretty sure she could hear Bart Simpson's voice coming out of the living room. There was something else, too. Anne sniffed the air. She smelled smoke ... cigarette smoke. That was odd. Beth hadn't been home all day. Frowning, Anne took off her shoes and walked towards the living room. There was Maria, sitting curled up on the couch with her socks off, a half-smoked cigarette burning in her fingertips. "Well, well, look what we have here," Anne said. Maria started, twisting her head around; obviously, she hadn't heard Anne come in. Maria looked down at the cigarette in her hand, then back up at Anne. "Um ... shit." "Shit is right," Anne said, walking into the room. "You won't tell, will you? Mom'd kill me." "Yeah, she probably would. She's always going on about how hard it is for her to quit. Wonder what she'd think of her baby girl following in her footsteps?" Maria bit her lip. Anne sat down. "So," she said, "How long have you been smoking for?" "Six months or so," Maria answered, bringing the cigarette up and taking a drag. Anne noted, a little clinically, that she smoked almost exactly like her mother did. "Six months. Guess you're addicted now, huh?" Maria smiled ruefully. "Yeah, I guess I am. It just sort of crept up on me." "That was stupid of you." Maria took another drag, blew the smoke up into the air. "Probably was, yeah." "So it was perfectly in character, then." Maria looked at her quizzically, cocking her head. "Anne, why are you always so mean to me?" "Because I don't like you. And now that my dad isn't here, I can say it to your face. I don't like you, I don't like anything about you, and I'd prefer it if you just kept yourself to yourself this weekend." She stood up to leave; the conversation was beginning to bore her. "Anne?" She paused, turned her head. "What?" "Are you gonna tell Mom and Dad?" Dad, thought Anne. So you're calling him Dad, now. Bitch. "Don't bother me, Maria. Don't bother me, and you can do what you like." She walked off, up the stairs to her room, leaving Maria to puzzle over her cryptic response. She spent the rest of the night in her room, finishing off The Left Hand of Darkness and doing her homework, coming out of her room only to microwave a TV dinner. Maria only bothered her once, coming up to tell her that she was going out with her friends and wouldn't be back until late. "Whatever," Anne said, and went back to ignoring her. III Anne woke up late the next day, as she usually did on weekends. She took her time getting herself ready for the day, taking a long, hot shower, checking her e-mail, and catching up with the news on google over a cup of coffee with lots of milk and sugar. Around noon, she went back upstairs to her room to settle down for a long day of reading. Two hours later, on her way back from the bathroom, she passed by Maria's door and heard her step-sister crying inside. Curious, she pushed open the door - it was already open a crack - and peered inside. There was Maria, lying face down, sobbing softly in her pajamas. She leaned against the door frame and stood watching her, strangely entranced by the sight. She'd never seen her step-sister like this before. Normally she was so confident, so cheerful. Now, she seemed vulnerable. It was disconcerting. Something must have tipped Maria off to her presence, because she turned over and saw Anne standing there, watching her. "What do you want?" she said, her voice cracking a little. Her face was streaked with tears. "I ... heard you crying from the hallway. I just peered in to see what was wrong." "Like you care. You hate me. You're probably happy to see me like this." Anne was silent for a moment. Then she said, "No, actually, I'm not," surprising herself with her answer. "Liar." "I'm never happy to see someone cry." She favoured Maria with a small smile, a rare expression on Anne's face, and said, "I might not like you very much, but that doesn't mean I'm a sadist. I don't go in for schadenfreude." "What?" Anne shook her head. Sometimes she forgot that her vocabulary was so much larger than most of her peers. Of course, sometimes she remembered, and used it regardless, just to rub it in. "It's a German word. It means to take pleasure in the pain of others. I was saying I don't do that." Maria sniffed. "Oh." "Do you want to talk about it?" Anne asked, not really meaning it, saying it more to be polite than out of heartfelt concern. "No, not really. You wouldn't care. Maybe you should just leave me alone." "Maybe I should," said Anne. And stood there. Maria turned back over, putting her face back into her pillow, and started crying again. Anne sighed. Maria looked like she needed a sympathetic ear and a shoulder to cry on, and in lieu of anyone else, it looked like she was it. She walked into the room and sat down on the bed. Her voice muffled through the pillow, Maria said, "You're still here?" "I'm still here," Anne confirmed. There was an awkward silence, and Anne mustered up the courage to say, "So, what's wrong?" "You don't care." "No, I don't, not really. But you're hurt, and I don't like seeing anyone like that. Maybe talking about it will make you feel better." "So you can walk off and go back to ignoring me?" "Pretty much, yeah." Maria gave a short, dark laugh. "You really can be a bitch, Anne." "I suppose so. But right now I'm a bitch that wants to hear your problems. So, come on, out with them. What's eating you?" Maria rolled over, sat up against the wall. "It's this boy," she said, and Anne thought, Of course it is. "His name's Tod. We've been seeing each other for a few months now, since just after the wedding." "What's he like?" "Well, he's big, handsome. He's got a great ass. He's on the basketball team. Really athletic. I've had a crush on him for, like, a year, so when he asked me if I wanted to catch a movie with him a few months ago I was like, for sure, you know, like, anything you want to see." "And?" "And it was fun. We had a really great time. We smoked a jay behind the theatre, just the two of us, and then we saw the movie and it was pretty, you know, whatever, but it was fun cause we just kind of sat there and made fun of it the whole time. Then we stopped off at the park on the way home and made out for a while, just kissing and stuff. Nothing too heavy." "And you've been seeing him ever since?" "Yeah. We've been hanging out all the time. I watched all of his games, he came to my drama rehearsals, we went to parties together, and we just like spent all this time together. It's funny, 'cause most of the girls think he's kind of a bonehead, 'cause he's a jock, right, but he's actually a really bright guy. Really funny." "Sounds like you've got a good thing going on." "That's what I thought. I thought we were getting serious about it, I mean, I know I was, I was, like totally in love with the guy, right? So then, last week, we're at Mac Dylans' party - he's an older guy at my school, and his parents were out so there was this big house party at his place, everyone was invited - and Tod takes me up to one of the rooms. We're both, like, totally wasted, we'd been smoking weed and drinking all night, and I was all laughing and buzzing and having a really great time. And Tod takes me into the room and we jump into the bed, and things started getting pretty heavy, and before long I know that he wants to get laid, right, and I kind of want it too, and I figure, hey, he's being a gentleman about it, he's got protection, so why the hell not?" "And you opened your legs for him." Maria nodded. "Yeah, pretty much." "Your first time?" Maria nodded. "Wow," said Anne, then, "How was it?" "Oh, it was okay, I guess. Kind of cool, actually, especially towards the end. Hurt a little at first, though." She laughed. "Mac's sheets were, like, totally ruined, too. I bet he flipped when he saw them." "So...." "So?" "So where's the problem?" "I didn't think there would be one. I just thought, you know, that our relationship had moved to the next level." "And Tod didn't see it that way." Maria shook her head, bursting out into tears again. "The next day, he was really weird, and he wouldn't talk to me, and then yesterday I found out that he'd told all of his buddies on the team that I was a really shitty lay and that he was done with me." "That fuck." Maria nodded, then the tears came streaming out of her face and she threw herself at Anne, hugging her and sobbing into her shoulder. Anne froze up, not sure what to do, then hesitantly put a hand on Maria's hair and stroked it. She searched for something to say, finally settling for murmuring, "It's all right. He's a bastard. You can do better with him," all the while thinking, Christ, listen to all these platitudes coming out of my mouth. Eventually, Maria's sobbing subsided. She pulled back, wiping at her eyes, and said, "Fuck. I need a cigarette." She reached over to her jacket, hanging on her doorknob, took out a packet and a lighter (the same brand Beth smokes, Anne thought, she must steal them from her mother) and proceeded to light herself one. Smoking calmed her down visibly, Anne noticed. They spent the rest of the day talking together, first about Tod and what a prick he was, and then about some of Maria's previous boyfriends (as well as Anne's solitary, lacklustre affair back in tenth grade; Anne was embarrassed to find herself constantly referring back to it, in desperate search of common experience.) Soon enough, Maria's tears were gone entirely and she was more or less back to her old, cheerful self. The conversation wound on to other things: school, movies, plays, hair, makeup, even politics. Anne was shocked to find that Maria was not such an airhead as she had assumed: many of her opinions were quite astute, cloaked as they were in the awkward language of the average sixteen year-old. Maria smoked throughout the day, having one cigarette after another, averaging about two every hour. Anne was frankly amazed at how much she smoked, and commented on it once or twice. "Isn't it gross?" she asked, "I mean, they smell horrible, they hurt your throat, they taste like shit ... how can you smoke so many of them?" Maria shrugged, laughed, and said, "Oh, it's not so hard. They're gross at first, yeah, but you get used to them quickly, and then you even get so you like them. I like them a lot. I don't usually smoke this much," she laughed again, "Except when I'm drinking, but Mom and Dad aren't home right now, so I figure, what the hell, might as well make the most of it. It's not every day I can smoke at home, you know." "Why did you start?" "Oh, curiosity, I guess. Watching Mom do it all the time, wondering why she did it. One day I just figured, hey, why not try it for myself, see what it's like." "And then you got addicted." "Well ... yeah, I guess. There's more to it than that, though. I really do like smoking. I like the way it makes me feel, and I like the way it makes me look. Much older, and more of a ... a bad girl, I guess. You'd be surprised how differently boys treat you when they see you smoking. It's like suddenly, you're a whole new person." "Hmm." There was silence, while Anne watched Maria smoke her cigarette, giving it short, hard drags, letting the smoke escape her lips in thin plumes that carried the bulk of it a few feet up towards the ceiling, where it settled into a gentle halo around her head. "Anne?" "Yes?" "Would you like to try it?" "No...." "You sure?" "Well...." "Just one. Just so you can see what it's like. It won't kill you, you know." "I'm really not sure if that's a good idea...." "Come on, Anne. Live a little. It'll be fun." Anne fixed her step-sister with a gaze that could split bricks. "I'm not so sure it'll be fun, but okay. I'll take your challenge. Give me a cigarette." Maria took a cigarette out of her pack, handing it over to Anne. Anne took it, holding it awkwardly, not sure what to do with it. "Just put the filter in your lips," Maria said. Anne did so, and Maria flicked the lighter, bring the flame up to the tip. "Now, when the flame touches the tip, suck on the end. The smoke will come into your mouth; don't inhale it just yet, though, or it will make you cough, and you might get sick." Anne did as she was instructed, and as the tip of her cigarette flared to life her mouth filled with the taste of grey, cancerous ash. She breathed it out, the smoke escaping in a diffuse cloud. "Ick," she said, "That tastes vile." "Of course it does," said Maria, "It's your first cigarette. You have to get used to them first." "I guess," said Anne, not sounding convinced, "Though I'm not sure this is something I'd want to get used to." She brought the cigarette up to her lips again, dragged on it, breathed out another shapeless cloud of smoke. She continued to do so for a few minutes, then, the cigarette almost done, she crushed it out in the ashtray. Thank God that's over with, she thought. Maria had already finished hers; once Anne was done, she said, "Hey, I'm getting kind of hungry. You want something to eat?" Anne nodded. "Yeah." "I'll cook it. I'm a really good cook." Anne rolled her eyes. "Yeah, I know. You spend more time in that kitchen than anyone else in this house." Anne had never understood the attraction of cooking. For her cooking was, like so much else, an inconvenience that distracted from the truly interesting, important things in life. They ate dinner half an hour later, their conversation continuing uninterrupted. Maria lit a cigarette as soon as her meal was done, sitting back in the sofa and saying, "Damn, there's nothing like a cigarette after a good meal." She smoked it alone for a bit, then said, "Say, Anne. You want to try again? Inhaling it, this time, to see what smoking's really like?" Anne wrinkled her face. "Eww, no. That first one was bad enough." Maria smiled. "You'll never know what it's really like unless you try it for real." She took a large drag on her cigarette, pulling the smoke deep into her lungs and breathing it out in a long, satisfied stream, "And believe me, you're missing out. It's really great." Anne pursed her lips, then said, "Oh, fine. Why not. Just one more." Maria grinned, and passed her over another cigarette. Anne lit it, while Maria said, "This time, inhale the smoke. Once you take the cigarette down from your lips, breath in to take the smoke into your lungs." Anne did as she was told, and immediately doubled over coughing. Maria laughed, and Anne glared at her, still coughing. "Don't worry," Maria said, her voice dancing with laughter, "It happens to everyone the first time. Take it easy. Try again; you won't cough next time." So she waited a bit, letting the cigarette smoulder for a minute or so, and then did as Maria had suggested. Maria was right: she didn't cough. Instead, the smoke slid into her lungs, and when she exhaled, it came out in a stream, just like Maria's, if significantly thinner and harder to see. Anne was about halfway done her cigarette when she noticed a funny feeling coming over her. "Whoa," she said, "That's weird. I feel kind of dizzy and floaty." Maria smiled. "Yeah, I remember that feeling. Feels good, doesn't it?" "Yeah," Anne said, "It does, actually," and took another drag on her cigarette. It took Anne about twice as long to smoke hers as it did Maria, as her drags were shallower and not as close together. By the end, she felt a pleasant buzzing all over her body, as though her nerves were dancing. This is kind of nice, thought Anne. I could see how someone could get to like this. They talked for a couple more hours, Maria smoking four more cigarettes and Anne smoking none. The buzz had faded quickly enough, but afterwards Anne's throat felt a little sore and she didn't feel like renewing the feeling. Around eleven, they bid each other good night and went to their rooms. Anne read for a couple of hours, and then went to sleep. The next day passed quietly enough, Anne ensconced in her room doing her homework, Maria spending less time doing her homework and more time talking to her friends on the phone. Around five o'clock, Beth and her Dad got back, smiling and relaxed after a romantic weekend spent together in a cabin somewhere in the mountains. Maria already had supper ready for the four of them, and they had a pleasant meal together, telling each other about their weekends. After dinner, Anne helped Maria with the dishes, a task which went quickly with the two of them working at it. When they were done, Maria said, a twinkle in her eye, "I'm going for a walk, Anne. Want to come?" Anne shrugged. "Sure, why not. Dad'll be happy to see us hanging out together and getting along." Once they were out of sight of the house, Maria pulled out her cigarettes. She hadn't had one for two hours before their parents got home, not wanting to risk getting caught. She placed a cigarette between her lips, pursing them as she lit it and gave it a savage drag. "God, did I ever need that," she said, the smoke coming out in wisps around her words, then in a stream as she exhaled the rest. "Would you like one, Anne?" Remembering the feeling the night before, Anne said, "Sure, why not?" and accepted the third cigarette of her life from Anne's hand. She placed it between her lips, then took the lighter and fumbled around with it for a bit before figuring out how to light it. She didn't cough at all this time, and was obscurely proud of the fact. As she puffed away, she felt the pleasant sensation coming back. The nicotine diffused through her lungs, into her blood, finally making its way to her brain. Ann didn't know it, but it was already starting to work its own special black magic on her nervous system. She had taken her third step on the short path towards a lifelong addiction. IV The following week, Anne took three more evening walks with Maria. Each time, she had one cigarette, while Maria had two, and each time, she got the pleasant buzz that she had grown to love that fateful Saturday night. Anne was surprised to find that she actually liked Maria. She found herself telling Maria things she would never have told her friends Jen and Candace, or even her father, secrets and opinions that she had kept to herself throughout her life. She told her about her mother, about the horrible things she'd done, about how relieved she'd been when the divorce happened. Maria's experience hadn't been like that: in her case, her parents' divorce had been far more common, with faults on both sides, with each parent trying to poison Maria against the other. Maria admitted to being torn between the two, but also to occasionally playing the one off against the other. The next weekend, Maria invited Anne to come to a party with her. Anne had never gone to a party before; at least, not since grade school. She'd always looked down on them, but then, that was largely because she'd never been invited. Getting permission to go was no problem, of course. Anne's father was glad to see her getting along with her step-sister, and even happier to see her finally take an interest in something social. She went with his blessing. They met up with Maria's friends on the way there. They were all girls, of course, most of them quite attractive, all dressed much as Maria was dressed, in fashionable, revealing, form-fitting clothing designed to flatter the figure and attract the attention of the male eye. And, of course, all of them smoked. It was only natural that Anne smoked with them. She was only intending to have one (or maybe two) during the whole night, still intending to avoid the addiction that was already sinking its hooks into her brain, but it didn't take long for Maria to talk Anne into having one of the vodka coolers one of her older friends had purchased at the LCBO. Anne had never drank alcohol before, and just one of them went straight to her head. Thus loosened, she found herself smoking throughout the night. By the end of the party, she'd finished off five or six cigarettes with no problem at all. Anne spent the next day doing her homework for the weekend, methodically working her way through her math book, taking laborious notes from her biology text. After supper, Maria asked Anne again to go for a walk with her. Of course, Anne accepted. It was equally inevitable that she accepted yet another cigarette from her step-sister. She didn't notice it, but her drags were already becoming heavier, her inhales deeper, her exhales longer and thicker. Her body was starting to get used to smoking, and as she got used to it, slowly, inevitably, she began to develop a need for it. Two more weeks passed in that fashion. Soon, their evening walks had become a daily ritual, the two of them spending half an hour or more walking around the neighborhood, talking and smoking. Tuesday nights, she and Maria would hook up with Maria's friends to go to a movie, and Anne found herself smoking along with them, once on the way to the theatre, and once again when they got out. It seemed natural to light up, when everyone else was, especially with Maria there, offering her the pack. Anne attended another party with Maria. She was already starting to warm to Maria's friends, and they to her, accepting her as one of the group. Once again, Maria drank, and once again, she had half a dozen cigarettes, though not so many as Maria herself, who smoked almost an entire pack in the five hours they were there. Then came Monday, the decisive day in Anne's new life as a smoker. About halfway through the day, Anne became aware of a strange feeling. She felt weirdly anxious and nervous, finding it hard to concentrate on what the teacher was saying. She didn't want to be in class. She wanted to be somewhere else, she wanted.... She wanted a cigarette, she realised. In fact, it was all she could think about. Fuck, Anne thought, it's started. I'm getting addicted. The feeling subsided after a few minutes, but it came back throughout the day, stronger each time. When Beth came to pick her up, it got particularly bad, watching her step-mother smoke beside her, wanting nothing more than to reach out and pluck the cigarette from her fingers and suck the sweet, grey smoke deep into her lungs. Anne resolved, right there, that she would quit smoking. That night, for the first time in weeks, Anne stayed home rather than accompany Maria out on her walk. The next night, though, Maria came up to Anne's room after supper and said, "Hey, Anne, you want to come with me? We're going to go see The Two Towers tonight." Anne hesitated. She really wanted to see that movie. The first one had been incredible, and this one was supposed to be even better. She sighed. She'd just have to be strong. "Yeah," she said, "I'll come." Maria offered her a cigarette on the way there, and again while they were all standing outside the theatre, just before it started, but Anne turned her down both times. The second time was harder than the first, with six other girls all standing around her, satisfying their fully developed addictions. The movie was long, just as the first one had been. As it stretched into the third hour, Maria leant over and said, "This movie's great, but I don't know about you, I'm absolutely dying for a smoke right now." Anne just nodded. So was she. She'd been managing to ignore it, but Maria had just pushed it to the front of her mind, and it stayed there for the rest of the movie. When they got out, the six girls had their cigarettes in their mouths before they were even out the door. Lighters were passed around, and soon they were all enveloped in a cloud of smoke, talking and gesturing animatedly with their cigarettes as they raved on about how amazing the movie had been. Watching them all, so happy, Anne just couldn't take it anymore. "Um, Maria?" "Yeah?" "Could I, uh...." "Have a cigarette?" Maria finished, a knowing look in her eye. Anne nodded sheepishly. "Sure. There you go." Anne accepted the cigarette gratefully, placing the filter between her lips and bending to accept a light from her step-sister. Her cheeks collapsed as she dragged, bringing the cigarette to life, and she exhaled a long, thick stream of smoke. Relief flowed throughout her body, her nerves singing as they gratefully absorbed the fresh, welcome dosage of nicotine. Anne had another cigarette on the way home, smoking as she walked with Maria. Well, I guess it's official, then, she thought. I'm a smoker, now. It felt weird. Maria got her cigarettes from her older friend Melissa, the same girl who purchased the liquor for their parties. Getting a supply was no problem; Melissa agreed without prompting to pick some up for Anne as well, getting her the same brand - Benson & Hedges Lights 100s - that Maria smoked. Paying wasn't a problem either: Anne's dad gave her a generous weekly allowance, one that easily paid for her growing addiction without his being any the wiser. Soon, Anne was smoking four or five cigarettes a day, sneaking out to the smoking pit during breaks and lunch, and smoking two - or more - with Maria every night. Anne was now at the point where she felt cravings whenever she went more than a couple of hours without. She was past the point of no return. Candace and Jen were shocked, of course. They would never have expected Maria to start smoking, and when she came back in from first break on Wednesday smelling of smoke, they reacted with utter horror. Anne's reaction was, at first, a genial, "You guys can go fucks yourselves," followed eventually by the more reasoned "Don't knock it till you've tried it." V The weeks turned into months, and Anne's addiction continued to grow. Before long, she was smoking as much as Maria smoked, easily getting through a pack every three days or so, and smoking another pack every Friday night at the parties she now always attended with Maria. She found it hard to stay home during the week, with the smell of Beth's cigarettes awakening her cravings only an hour or two after her nightly walks with Maria, making it hard to concentrate on her studies. Once, during one of their walks, she asked Maria, "How do you stand it, staying home and watching Beth smoke? Doesn't it just drive you insane?" Maria rolled her eyes. "God, does it ever."She paused to take a drag on her cigarette, and said, "You know, I really wish we were allowed to smoke in front of our parents." Anne nodded, dragging on her B&H and exhaling a thick, creamy stream of smoke. "Yeah, that would be really great." "Never happen, though." Anne was silent. She wasn't so sure of that, herself. Two months into her new life as a smoker, Anne was already spending her entire lunch hour outside, where she could smoke two cigarettes with a meal in between. By the end of second period, she wanted a smoke way more than she wanted to eat, and after she ate there was nothing she wanted more than another cigarette. Before long, Jen and Candace had taken to accompanying her outside, doing what they could to preserve the unity of their little clique. Candace had been the first to stop nagging Anne about her dirty new habit, figuring that her friend was addicted and there was probably no point in pressing the matter. Jen still needled her about it from time to time, but far less so than at the beginning. Once the initial shock wore off, her two friends steadily became used to her new habit. Once, on a Wednesday when Jen was in school during lunch hour doing work on the yearbook, Candace and Anne were sitting together under a tree. Anne finished off her lunch before Candace did, took out her pack, and placed one of the long, white cigarettes between her lips, lighting her fourth cigarette of the day. As she smoked, they talked, and eventually the conversation worked its way around to smoking. "Anne," Candace said, "Why did you start smoking? It's never made any sense to any of us." Anne shrugged, puffing away on her cigarette. "I dunno. I liked it, I guess. My step-sister gave me my first one, and it was a lot nicer than I expected it to be. So I tried it again, and I got used to it and started to really, really like it." "So it wasn't peer-pressure?" Candace asked. Anne laughed. "Come on, Candace. Peer pressure? Me? The only peers I have that can pressure me are you and Jen. No, I didn't start smoking to fit in, I started smoking because I found out that I liked to smoke." "That's kind of weird, Anne. I mean, how could you like something so gross?" "I don't know. It's not something that can really be explained. You just have to try it for yourself." "Oh." Anne smiled, a mischievous grin flickering over her face. "So, Candace. You want to try it?" Her friend bit her lip, looked around to see if anyone was watching. Of course, the smoking area was packed, but no one was paying attention to them. "Sure," she said, "Why not." Anne took out her pack, opened it and extracted a cigarette. "All right," she said, "But only on one condition." "What's that?" "You have to have at least three. It takes that many before you really understand just how much fun smoking is." "Three in a row?" Candace looked shocked. Anne shook her head. "No, just three. Like, one today, one tomorrow, one the day after. Something like that. Deal?" "Okay." Candace reached out, accepted the cigarette from Anne's hand. She looked at it for a second, as though shocked to see a cigarette between her fingers, then raised it to her lips and waited for Anne to bring the lighter to bear. Anne did so, instructing her on how to light it, and warning her against inhaling. Candace brought the cigarette down from her lips; her mouth opened, and a shapeless cloud puffed out and into the air. Anne found herself smiling as she watched her friend. She looked quite strange, sitting there with a cigarette in her hand. Candace was a short black girl, only a little over five feet tall. She kept her hair short and braided, and wore a pair of thick glasses over her eyes to correct for her severe short-sightedness. She was invariably dressed in an almost random fashion: her clothes never matched, either in color or in style. Underneath the glasses and the unfortunate apparel, however, Candace was a very pretty girl, with a nice figure and a pleasant face. She was one of the very last people anyone, including Anne, would ever expect to see smoking a cigarette. Which was why Anne found herself chuckling as she watched her friend struggle with the strange, foreign object held awkwardly in her hands. "What?" Candace asked, glaring at her friend. "Oh, nothing," replied Anne, as she took one last haul on her smoke, burning the tip almost down to the filter, exhaling slowly as she crushed it out under her heel. She waited for Candace to finish, then said, "Come, we'll be late for class." "That was gross," Candace said as they walked in. Two hours later, Anne walked out the front doors of the school to see Beth waiting for her, as always, across the parking lot. The window was rolled down, and Anne could see Beth's arm resting on the side, a cigarette dangling from her fingertips. Anne sighed. It had been a whole hour since her last smoke, and she wanted a cigarette. Seeing her step-mother contentedly puffing away made it worse. On the drive home, Beth told Anne about her day, Anne making non-committal remarks when it seemed as though she was expected to say something. When Beth asked her about her own day, she gave her a few monosyllabic answers devoid of any real informational content. The two of them lapsed into silence, as they usually did at such moments. After a few minutes of that, Beth said, "Anne, would you mind handing me my cigarettes and my lighter, please?" Anne did as she was asked. It was almost painful taking the cigarettes out of Beth's purse, extracting a long, white B&H from the pack, and handing it over to Beth. Beth placed the end in her mouth, accepted the lighter from Anne, and lit her cigarette, her cheeks hollowing in as she drew in a massive lungful of smoke. Her cigarette lit, she rolled down the window and blew the smoke outside; Anne could still smell it, however, and the smell aggravated a need that had been gnawing at her belly the last hour. "Beth," Anne said, "Can I ask you a question?" "Certainly," Beth replied, a certain amount of shock registering in her voice at her step-daughters' uncharacteristic attempt to initiate a conversation. "How old were you when you started smoking?" Beth was silent a moment, blinking in surprise at the unexpected question. "Well," she finally replied, "I guess that depends on what you mean by 'started'. If you mean when did I have my first cigarette, I think I would have been about thirteen or so. If you mean, when did I become a regular smoker, well, I guess I would have been fourteen." "Wow," said Anne, surprised despite herself. "That's really young." "Yes, I suppose it was." "Why did you start?" "Oh, to be sociable, I guess. To act grown up. My parents both smoked, you see, so I was always around it. One day, I snuck a couple from my mom's purse, and me and a friend shared them. We were both horribly sick, of course, and I didn't touch cigarettes for months after that. But then my older sister - you haven't met her, she lives out in Vancouver - she started smoking, and I caught her one day. She was scared I was going to tell our parents, but then I told her that I'd tried it too. So she offered me one, to see if I was telling the truth, and I wasn't about to look foolish around her, so I took it." "And you've been a smoker ever since?" "Well, it didn't happen quite that fast. I was still quite young, of course. No, for a year or so after that I only had cigarettes quite infrequently, mostly with my sister. Maybe one or two a week. I didn't start smoking heavily until a couple of my friends started smoking on their own. We all started smoking together, and soon enough it went from an every week kind of thing to an every day kind of thing," she paused, took a long, deep drag on her cigarette, and exhaled a long, thick plume out the crack in the window. "It wasn't long at all after that before I found myself smoking all the time, five or six times a day." "How old were you when your parents found out?" Beth laughed. "Oh, God, what a production that was. I was sixteen. My sister - she was two years older than I was - she'd gotten caught when she was fifteen. Our parents absolutely hit the roof when they caught her, but by the time they found out I was smoking, they'd gotten used to her as a smoker. I learned from her mistakes, of course - I never smoked around the house, which was how she got caught - which was why I was able to get away with it a little longer than she did." "How did they catch you?" "I got careless one day. It was late at night, past the time my parents were usually in bed, and I was niccing something fierce. That was nothing unusual - by that point I was smoking half a pack a day, and it was absolute torture to be home all the time and watching my parents and my sister smoking up a storm - but this time it was particularly bad, as it was on the weekend and we'd just come back from a family reunion, where I'd only been able to have maybe two cigarettes all day. I was in an absolute frenzy by the time my parents went to bed, and I don't think I waited five minutes before I lit up a smoke. Then, not even a minute later, my mother came down the stairs and caught me red handed." "Did they freak out?" "They did. I was grounded for a month, not just for smoking, but also for stealing and for sneaking around behind their backs. They got used to my smoking pretty quickly, though. Before the month was out, they accepted it, and never said a word about it again." "That must have been a relief." "Oh, it was, let me tell you. Finally, I was able to smoke at home, and not have to go sneaking about and always be worried about getting caught." Beth took a last drag on her cigarette and flicked the butt out the window. They lapsed back into silence for a while, and then Beth said, "Anne, may I ask you a question?" "... I guess so." "Whatever did you want to know all that for?" "Oh," said Anne, "No reason." "Hmm." That night, after dinner, Anne and Maria went out on their nightly walk. They were silent as they left the house, their minds fixated on a single goal. As they rounded the corner, they pulled their packs out and lit up in unison, both of them proceeding to take three drags before pausing for air. "So much better," said Anne, the nicotine working its way through her bloodstream. "You can say that again," said Maria, dragging on her cigarette. "I had an interesting conversation with Beth tonight," said Anne, cutting straight to the chase. "What about?" "I asked her how old she was when she started smoking, how she got caught, what her parents did to her." "Yeah? What'd she say?" "She never told you?" "Never asked." "Huh," Anne paused, took another drag on her cigarette, exhaled, and said, "Well, she started when she was like fourteen." "... Wow." "Uh-huh. Didn't get caught until she was sixteen, though. And her parents let her smoke after that." "Really?" "Well, they grounded her, first." "Well, of course." "So, I was thinking. Remember what we were talking about a few nights back? About how great it would be if we could smoke in the house?" "Yeah?" "I'm thinking of just coming out and telling Beth I smoke." "Anne! She'll kill you! And if she doesn't, your dad will!" "Dad might. But he's pretty laid back. He'll get used to it. Beth, I'm not so sure about. I think if I approach her the right way, she'll be cool with it. If she is, she'll run interference for me with dad. And if she isn't, well, the worst that can happen is that I get grounded for a month or so. I can do that kind of time." "Yeah, but ... Anne, if you tell her you smoke, she'll think I do, too!" "She might. But if she's fine with me smoking, she'll be fine with you smoking, too." "Anne, you're crazy, you know that?" Anne grinned. "Crazy like a fox." The next day at school, Candace was as good as her word, coming out with Anne for her second cigarette during lunch. Jen made a big production when she saw her second friend accepting a cigarette from her first, and stomped away, fuming. This time, Anne coached Candace through the lighting-and-inhaling process, doing her best not to giggle when her friend coughed as smoke touched her virgin lungs. She coughed a couple more times as the smoke went down, but by the time she was nearing the end of her cigarette she was already exhaling little, thin streams of smoke. They were faint - Anne had to work to see them - but they were undeniably there. After the cigarette, they stood up to go back. Candace promptly sat back down, momentarily too dizzy to move. She giggled, shook her head dizzily, and got back to her feet. "Wow," she said, "This feels really cool." "I know," said Anne, smiling a secret smile. On the way back from school that evening, Anne asked another question. "Beth," she said, "How do you feel about smoking? I mean, does it ever bother you that you've been smoking almost your entire life?" Beth was silent for a while. "Sometimes," she finally replied. "I don't usually think about it. Every once in a while, though, I wonder if the cigarette I'm smoking is the one that'll finally kill me." "But then you go back and have another." Beth smiled ruefully. "Yes, well. I am a smoker, you know. I've been addicted to nicotine for a long time. So long that it's become a part of me." "Have you ever tried to quit?" "Of course I have, once or twice. I quit for almost a whole year one time, when I was pregnant with Maria." "Why'd you start again? I mean, they told us in health class that if a smoker goes, like, a week without a cigarette, the physical addiction goes away. So after a year you can't get cravings any more." "No, no ... it wasn't cravings that made me start back up again. It was ... well, I supposed I missed it, really. Missed the feel of the cigarette in my hands, missed blowing smoke." "So you like smoking?" Anne did her best to sound incredulous, as if she couldn't really believe anyone could enjoy so vile a habit. "Of course I do. I enjoy it a lot. Oh, sometimes I find it somewhat inconvenient, like when I'm in a meeting and I've been there an hour and I'm absolutely dying for a cigarette but I can't leave. But for the most part, I do enjoy it." She paused, sighed, and said, "All this talk of smoking is making me want one. Would you hand me one of my cigarettes, Anne?" "Of course," Anne said. "Actually," Beth said, "The driving is rather horrible right now. I'm not sure I want to distract myself from the road. Would you mind lighting it for me, dear? If it's not too much trouble?" "Oh," Anne said, trying to sound virtuous and slightly put-upon, "Sure, no problem." She took the cigarette out of the pack, placing it between her lips. She didn't want to give away her hand just yet, and she intended to look as though she'd never lit a cigarette before. But when she touched the flame to the tip, sheer reflex made her pump hard on the end, drawing in a lungful of smoke. Not until it escaped her lips in a long, perfectly formed stream did she realize her mistake. "Just as I thought," said Beth, looking at Anne out the corner of her eye. "I knew there had to be a reason for all those questions about smoking." Busted, thought Anne. Beth was smarter than she'd thought.... Beth accepted her cigarette and gave it a long drag. "So, Anne, I see you've taken up smoking." "Uh...." Beth laughed. "Cat got your tongue? I don't think I've ever seen you speechless before, Anne." Anne felt her face turning bright red. This wasn't like she'd expected at all. Beth looked at Anne, a smile pushing up the corner of her mouth. "You look uncomfortable, dear. Would you like a cigarette?" "Yes, please," Anne said, her voice small. "Help yourself." Anne did, taking several drags on her cigarette to calm herself down. This is weird, she thought, smoking with my step mom. And she isn't freaking out or anything. "So, Anne, how long have you been smoking for?" "Three months." "Three months! And you're smoking like that already! You must already be quite addicted." "Well...." "How many cigarettes a day? Three, four?" "More like six or seven, actually." "Well, I guess there's no point in trying to stop you, then. If you're already smoking that heavily, you'd find a way to smoke whether I let you or not." "So you're not going to punish me?" Beth smiled. "For smoking? Of course not. That would be rather hypocritical of me, now, wouldn't it?" "Are you going to tell Dad?" "Of course." "But he'll kill me!" "I'll see what I can do. I'm sure I can make him see reason. There's one thing I'd like to know, however." "Yes, Beth?" "Was it Maria that got you smoking?" Anne looked at her, shocked. Damn, she was sharp. Beth didn't even wait for an answer: the expression on Anne's face was enough. "Yes, I'd thought so. I've suspected as much for a while, now, but I hadn't wanted to say anything." "Are you going to get her in trouble?" "You and Maria shall share the same punishment, whatever that might be." Nothing was said that night at supper, and Anne was temporarily relieved. When she and Maria left for their walk, however, she caught Beth giving her a knowing look, a slight smile on her face to let her know that she wasn't mad, but making Anne blush all the same. She told Maria, and her step-sister immediately started yelling at her, until Anne managed to calm Maria down by telling her that, just as she'd expected, Beth hadn't seemed all that mad, more amused really, and that she fully expected that they'd both be allowed to smoke in the house before the week was up. "Buck up, Maria," she said, "I'm sure there'll be some sort of punishment, but Mom'll make sure it's just a token." Anne smoked in the car on the way to school the next day. Beth offered her one of her cigarettes, but Anne shook her head and produced her own pack. It was just another way of letting Beth know that Anne really was a smoker, now. After all, only smokers carried their cigarettes around in their jacket pockets. This time, Candace came out with Anne on the first break of the day, accepting her third cigarette from her and lighting it, only a little awkwardly this time. She only coughed once, just a little on the first puff, but she inhaled every drag and when she was done she was just as buzzed as she'd been the day before. "So," Anne asked as they went back into the school, "How do you like smoking?" "I like it," said Candace, "It makes me feel really cool." She came out with Anne again for lunch, though Jen pointedly didn't, and when they'd both finished their meals Candace watched Anne light up and said, "Um, Anne? Could I have one too, please?" "Of course you can," Anne said, and handed her friend her second of the day. She lit it for her, her mouth twisting into a little smile around the cigarette dangling from her lips as she did so. "So are you going to tell Dad tonight?" Anne asked as she got into Beth's car, an unlit cigarette already dangling from her lips. "Not just yet," Beth said, "I want to talk to Maria, first. See how she feels." Anne rolled her eyes, lighting her cigarette and dragging on it heroically. "Please, Mom. I could tell you how she feels right now. Hell, I bet you could guess." "Did you just call me Mom, Anne?" Beth asked, her voice sounding shocked. ".... I guess I did." VI Maria and Anne were indeed punished, though it was every bit as light as Anne had predicted. They were grounded for a month, forced to stay home on evenings and weekends, but at the same time Beth allowed them to smoke - even purchased cigarettes for them, when they began to run low - and so it was no great hardship. By the end of the month, both were up to half a pack a day, and Beth was joking that she'd have to take out a second mortgage to support their habits. Candace began accompanying Anne outside on an increasingly regular basis. Almost right off the bat, she was coming out every day, often more than once. Two weeks after giving her friend her first cigarette, Anne asked her if she ever got cravings. Candace had averted her eyes, blushed a little, and said, well, yeah, now that you mention it.... Two weeks after that, out of 'concern for her health', Anne cut her off, just to see what would happen. After looking helpless for a bit, and then a little desperate as Anne teased her by taking long, deep drags on her cigarette, Candace had gone over to one of the other girls in the smoking pit and asked if she could please have a cigarette. When she got back, Anne had said, "Guess what, Candace? You're now officially a smoker." "Huh," Candace had said, lighting her cigarette and taking a drag far longer and deeper than the small ones she'd been making only a month ago. She held the smoke in her lungs for a few seconds, letting her day's first dosage of nicotine sink in, and then after a long exhale said, "How about that?" |
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